|
|
||
When should kids go mobile? Date published: 11/10/2009
BY EDIE GROSS When Theresa Rasmussen's daughter was 13, she made the Ni River Middle School basketball team. Rasmussen was thrilled--and worried. What if after-school practice was canceled or ended early? Or what if Rasmussen, who works at Fort Belvoir, was stuck in traffic on her way home to Spotsylvania? How would the two communicate in an emergency? Rasmussen had already been through that rigmarole with her son, who'd also been a middle school basketball player. "He would call, but he'd call from some office in the school, and if he didn't get me, I couldn't call him back," she said. This time, Rasmussen wasn't taking any chances. She got her daughter a cell phone. "It's come in very handy," said Rasmussen, whose daughter is now in high school. "I never know what traffic is going to be like on 95. That way, I could call her and let her know, 'Get a ride with a friend to her house, and I'll pick you up there.'" Seventy-one percent of teens ages 12 to 17 own a cell phone, up from 45 percent five years ago, according to research by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. But how does a parent know when a child is ready for the responsibility of phone ownership? There's no magical age at which it's appropriate, said Lynn O'Rourke Hayes, a Quantico native and family communications expert in Bozeman, Mont. Rather, she said, circumstances should dictate whether a child needs a cell phone, and it's up to the parents to set the boundaries. "What I hear is, 'Oh my gosh, my child wants a cell phone.' And they feel like they're giving in," Hayes said. "The shift I like to encourage parents to make is, it's not really for them [the kids]. It's for you to have peace of mind." 'IT'S A PRIVILEGE' Karen Child Ogden, a licensed family and marriage therapist in California, urges parents to remind their children that the cell phone belongs to the adults in the house--and the kids get to borrow it to keep in touch with their parents. It's not a toy or a tool for fitting in at school, she said. "Really, the thing we drive home is it's the parents' decision," she said. "They can say 'no.' It's not a right. It's a privilege."
Read more stories about Fredericksburg Date published: 11/10/2009
1. Be respectful. No personal attacks.
|
|
|||||||||||||||